Marjorie
AaronProfessor of Practice
Director, Center for Negotiation & Problem SolvingMarjorie
published Finding Settlements with Numbers, Maps, and Trees, in The
Handbook of Dispute Resolution (Michael Moffitt & Robert Bordone
eds., Jossey Bass 2005), published by the Program on Negotiation at
Harvard Law School. She taught two courses at Hamline University School
of Law’s Dispute Resolution Institute: Representation in Mediation
and Decision Analysis.

Marianna
Brown BettmanInvited Professor of LawMarianna
published her monthly Legally Speaking column in the American
Israelite, Cincinnati Herald, and City Beat on:
•
June: Deck v. Missouri: Does appearing in shackles before
a jury in the penalty phase of a death penalty case violate
a defendant’s due process rights?
•
July: Kelo v. City of New London: Is the taking of property
for economic development a constitutional use of eminent
domain?
•
August: Castle Rock v. Gonzales: Does failure of the police
to enforce a restraining order constitute a procedural
due process violation entitling the injured party to civil
damages?

Joseph
BiancalanaProfessor of LawJoseph
was elected to the Council of the Selden Society. His article,
The Politics and Law of Philoctetes, was accepted
for publication in the Journal of Law and Literature. Joseph
presented
Actions of Debt on an Obligation, 1399-1483 at the 17th
British Legal History Conference held at University College,
London University

Bert B. Lockwood, Jr.Distinguished
Service Professor of Law
Director, Urban Morgan Institute for Human RightsBert
published the first in a series of Human Rights Quarterly readers that will bring the work of the Quarterly in selected
areas (e.g., women’s rights, economic rights) to
the coursebook market.

Bradford C. MankJames
B. Helmer Jr. Professor of LawBrad
completed an article, Prudential Standing and the Dormant
Commerce Clause: Why the “Zone of Interests” Test
Should Not Apply to Constitutional Cases. He was elected
co-chair of the Cincinnati Environmental Advisory Council,
which advises the City Council, City Manager and City Departments
regarding environmental issues. Brad was quoted in Property
Seizure Legal, Cincinnati Post, June 24, 2005

Several of Brad’s articles were cited in prestigious
law reviews, including:
•
Can Congress Regulate Interstate Endangered Species under
the Commerce Clause? The Split in the Circuits over Whether
the Regulated Activity is Private Commercial Development
or the Taking of a Protected Species, 69 Brooklyn L.
Rev. 923 (2004), in John S. Baker, Jr., Jurisdictional
and Separation of Powers Strategies to Limit the Expansion
of Federal Crimes, 54 American Univ.
L. Rev. 545 (2005)
•
Textualism’s Selective Canons of Statutory Construction:
Reinvigorating Individual Liberties, Legislative Authority,
and Deference to Executive Agencies, 86 Kentucky L.J.
527 (1998), in James J. Brudney & Corey Ditslear, Canons
of Construction and the Elusive Quest for Neutral Reasoning,
58 Vanderbilt L. Rev. 1 (2005)
•
Using § 1983 to Enforce Title VI's Section 602 Regulations,
49 Univ. Kansas L. Rev. 321 (2001), and Are Anti-Retaliation
Regulations in Title VI or Title IX Enforceable in a Private
Right of Action: Does Sandoval or Sullivan Control
This Question?, 35 Seton Hall L.
Rev. 47 (2004), in David S. Cohen, Title
IX: Beyond Equal Protection, 28 Harvard
J. L. & Gender 217 (2005).

Donna
M. NagyCharles Hartsock Professor of LawDonna
chaired a panel on Emerging Trends in Corporate Governance
and Corporate Social Responsibility at the Annual Meeting
of the Law & Society Association in Las Vegas. She
attended a workshop on Globalizing the Law School Curriculum
at the University of the Pacific, McGeorge School of Law.

William J. RandsProfessor
of LawBill’s
article, Domination of a Subsidiary by a Parent, 32 Indiana
L. Rev. 421 (1999), was cited in Linda A. Malone, Environmental
Regulation of Land Use (Clark Boardman, 2005 Supp.).

Ronna G. SchneiderProfessor
of LawRonna
spoke to a group of Ukranian journalists on Ethics and
the First Amendment with attorney and former journalist
Ed Marks as part of Cincinnati’s
Sister Cities Project.

Joseph
P. TomainDean Emeritus and Wilbert and Helen
Ziegler Professor of LawJoe
spent the summer teaching in Tuscany, working for the ABA
in Beijing, and studying and writing in Santa Fe.
•
In Tuscany, under the auspices of the Justice
Institute for the Legal Profession, Joe co-taught (with Professor Cioffi)
a seminar for experienced lawyers and judges entitled Law,
Culture, and Justice, which included a walking tour of Florence
•
In Beijing, Joe served as site inspector for the ABA Section
on Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar reviewing the
China Program conducted by Indiana University-Indianapolis
School of Law
•
In Santa Fe, Joe took three courses at St. John’s College
and drafted a chapter of his book, Creon’s Ghost, concerning
Machiavilli’s The Prince

Verna
L. WilliamsAssociate
Professor of LawVerna
completed an article, Private Choices, Public Consequences:
Examining Education Reform through a Feminist Lens. She
presented Feminist Legal Advocacy as part of the College of Law's Summer Faculty Scholarship Series.

Ingrid
Brunk WuerthProfessor of LawIngrid
spoke on International Law and the President’s
War Powers as part of a panel on Law and Terrorism at
the Annual Meeting of the Law & Society Association
in Las Vegas. She presented International Law as an
Interpretive Norm as part of
the College of Law's Summer Faculty Scholarship Series.